Module – 1
Introduction to Supply Chain Management
Overview of Supply Chain
Management
Concept of Supply Chain Management
The Supply Chain Revolution
Generalized Supply chain Model
Supply chain and Networks
Extended organization
Integrative Management
What Is Supply Chain Management (SCM)?
Plan Source Make Deliver Buy
A set of approaches used to efficiently integrate
◦ Suppliers
◦ Manufacturers
◦ Warehouses
◦ Distribution centers
So that the product is produced and distributed
◦ In the right quantities
◦ To the right locations
◦ And at the right time
System-wide costs are minimized and
Service level requirements are satisfied
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Supply Chain Management
A supply chain is a set of organizations directly linked by one
or more of the upstream and downstream flows of products,
services, finances, and information from a source to a
customer. Managing a supply chain is 'supply chain
management'
Supply chain management (SCM) is the management of a
network of interconnected businesses involved in the ultimate
provision of product and service packages required by end
customers. Supply chain management spans all movement and
storage of raw materials, work-in-process inventory, and
finished goods from point of origin to point of consumption
(supply chain).
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Supply Chain Management
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The Supply Chain – Another View
Plan Source Make Deliver Buy
Suppliers Manufacturers Warehouses & Customers
Distribution Centers
Transportation Transportation
Material Costs Costs Costs Transportation
Manufacturing Costs Inventory Costs Costs
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WHAT IS SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
" Is the strategic management of activities involved in
the acquisition and conversion of materials to finished
products delivered to the customer"
Supplier Material Flow Customer
Management Management
Information Flow
Schedule / Stock
Conversion Delivery
Resources Deployment
Leads to Business Process Integration
Supply chain is the system by which
organizations source, make and deliver their
products or services according to market
demand.
Supply chain management operations and
decisions are ultimately triggered by demand
signals at the ultimate consumer level.
Supply chain as defined by experienced
practitioners extends from suppliers’
suppliers to customers’ customers.
DEFINITION: SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
“The planning and management of all activities involved in sourcing and
procurement, conversion, and all logistics management activities” (CSCMP)
An integrated supply chain management is the coordination and efficient
management of information, material and financial flow through improved
relationships at all stages of supply chain to obtain a sustainable competitive
advantage. (City University, London)
Goals of Supply Chain Management
SUPPLY CHAIN COMPONENTS
SUPPLIERS
Source of raw materials, component parts, semi-manufactured
products and unfinished or non-consumable products that occurs
early in the supply chain.
MANUFACTURERS
Makers of final products. Manufacturers perform the task of final
assembly or product integration.
DISTRIBUTORS
Responsible for managing, storing and handling of products for
organizations that don’t want to carry entire variety of products in
their own facilities.
LOGISTICS SERVICE PROVIDERS
Commercial provider of individual or multiple integrated service for
other entities in the supply chain e.g. transportation management,
value-added warehousing and distribution and information
technology based services
Key Benefits of Supply Chain Management
Develop better customer relationship and service
Creates better delivery mechanism for products with minimum
delay
Improve productivity and business functions
Minimize warehouse and transportation costs
Minimize direct and indirect costs
Enhances inventory management
Assist companies in adapting to the challenges of Globalization,
expanding customer expectation
Minimizing waste, achieving efficiencies through the supply
chain process
Evolution of Supply Chain Management Studies:
Five major movements can be observed in the evolution of supply
chain management studies:
1. Creation era
Supply chain management was first coined by a U.S. industry
consultant in the early 1980s.
Supply chain management include the need for large-scale
changes, re-engineering, downsizing driven by cost reduction
programs.
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
2. Integration era
Development of Electronic Data Interchange (EDI) systems
in the 1960s and developed through the 1990s by the
introduction of Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems.
3. Globalization era
The third movement of supply chain management
development, the globalization era, can be characterized by
the attention given to global systems of supplier relationships
and the expansion of supply chains over national boundaries
and into other continents.
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
4. Specialization era
Phase I: Outsourced Manufacturing and Distribution
In the 1990s, industries began to focus on “core
competencies” and adopted a specialization model.
Companies abandoned vertical integration, sold off non-core
operations, and outsourced those functions to other
companies.
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
5. Specialization Era
Phase II - Supply Chain Management as a service
Specialization within the supply chain began in the 1980s with
the inception of transportation brokerages, warehouse
management, and non-asset-based carriers and has matured
beyond transportation and logistics into aspects of supply
planning, collaboration, execution and performance
management
Origins of supply chain management
1950s & 1960s
- Mass production techniques used as principle cost reduction and productivity
improvement strategies
1960s & 1970s
- Development of Materials Requirements Planning (MRP) and Manufacturing Resource
Planning (MRPII) to coordinate inventory management and improve internal
communication
1980s & 1990s
- Intense global competition lead manufacturers to adopt:
· Supply Chain Management (SCM)
· Just-In-Time (JIT)
· Total Quality Management (TQM)
· Business Process Reengineering (BPR)
2000s and beyond
- Companies will focus on relationships, sustainability, and social responsibility
- Companies will focus on improving supply chain capabilities with initiatives such as:
· Third-party service providers (3PLs)
· Integrating logistics
· Using transportation to facilitate rapid response
Supply Chain Integration
Internal Links internally performed work
Operations into a seamless process that
Integration stretches across departmental
and/or functional boundaries, with
the goal of satisfying customer
requirements
A competency that enables firms to
Customer offer long-lasting, distinctive, value-
Integration added offerings to those customers
who represent the greatest value to
the firm or supply chain
SCM
The Integrated, synchronized flow of
materials, information and funds from
suppliers thru manufacturers to consumer
point of sale», i.e. from end-to-end
In a very broad sense: «all organizations
involved in fulfilling the customer request».
Supply chain management thus is a cross-
functional approach.
BENEFITS OF AN INTEGRATED SUPPLY CHAIN
IMPROVED CUSTOMER SERVICE & VALUE ADDED
Increased inventory availability, better on-time delivery
performances, higher order fill rates and lower post sales costs.
Better USE OF FIXED CAPITAL
Fixed capital use is maximized through partnerships and joint
planning that can decrease stock levels whilst maintaining
service.
UTILIZED ASSET
Asset utilization can be maximized by increasing inventory turns
and closely aligning supply with demand
INCREASED SALES & PROFITABILITY
The ability to assess outcomes due to price changes,
promotional events and new product development can be
enhanced through increased visibility resultant from information
sharing among supply chain partners
SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT
ACTIVITIES
PURCHASING INVENTORY MGMT.
Activities relating to the The process entails
procurement of all necessary monitoring of stock levels,
goods and services required to proper positioning of stock
operate. Involves all and active tracking of product
components of SC. age and availability.
ORDER PROCESSING WAREHOUSING
The function needed to fill The holding of goods with
customers’ orders, such as focus on moving product into,
order receipt, order picking through and out of
and order shipment. Involves warehouses in a timely
manufacturers, distributors manner.
and retailers
TRANSPORTATION
FORECASTING The movement of products
The process of predicting from one destination to
customer demand based on another using single (motor,
expected future sales and rail, water, air, pipeline) or
actual past sales. combined modes of transport
(intermodal).
What Is the Goal of Supply Chain
Management?.
Supply chain management is concerned
with the efficient integration of suppliers,
factories, warehouses and stores so that
merchandise is produced and distributed:
In the right quantities
To the right locations
At the right time
In order to
Minimize total system cost
Satisfy customer service requirements
Why is Supply Chain Mgmt. so important?
It influences availability, sales, manufacturing costs, working capital and
quality of product!
stoc
ks
Manufacturing
Forcasting
Sales &
Purchasing distribution Availability
L og to customer
istic
s
Investments
Tax and
customs
Why is supply chain management so
important?
◦ To gain efficiencies from procurement, distribution and
logistics
◦ To make outsourcing more efficient
◦ To reduce transportation costs of inventories
◦ To meet competitive pressures from shorter development
times, more new products, and demand for more
customization
◦ To meet the challenge of globalization and longer supply
chains
◦ To meet the new challenges from e-commerce
◦ To manage the complexities of supply chains
◦ To manage the inventories needed across the supply chain
Why is supply chain management difficult?
◦ Different organizations in the supply chain may
have different, conflicting objectives
Manufacturers: long run production, high quality, high
productivity, low production cost
Distributors: low inventory, reduced transportation costs, quick
replenishment capability
Customers: shorter order lead time, high in-stock inventory,
large variety of products, low prices
◦ Supply chains are dynamic - they evolve and
change over time
Important Elements of SCM
Purchasing- Supplier alliances, supplier management,
strategic sourcing
Operations- Demand management, MRP, ERP, JIT, TQM
Distribution- Transportation management, customer
relationship management, network
design, service response logistics
Integration- Coordination/Integration activities, global
integration problems, performance
measurement
Important Elements of SCM-Cont.
Purchasing:
Long term relationships
Supplier management- improved performance
through-
-- Supplier evaluation (determining supplier
capabilities and performance)
-- Supplier certification (third party or internal
certification to assure product quality and service
compliance)
Strategic partnerships- successful and trusting, long-
term relationships with top-performing suppliers
Important Elements of Supply Chain
Management-Cont.
Operations:
-- Demand management- match demand to
available capacity
-- Linking buyers & suppliers via MRP and ERP
systems
-- Use JIT to improve the “pull” of materials to
reduce inventory levels
-- Employ TQM to improve quality compliance
among buyers and suppliers
Important Elements of Supply Chain
Management-Cont.
Distribution:
-- Transportation management- tradeoff decisions
between cost & timing of delivery/customer service
via trucks, rail, water & air
-- Customer relationship management- strategies
to ensure deliveries, resolve complaints, improve
communications, & determine service requirements
-- Network design- creating distribution networks
based on tradeoff decisions between cost &
sophistication of distribution system
Important Elements of Supply Chain
Management-Cont.
Integration:
-- Supply Chain Integration- when supply chain
participants work for common goals. Requires
intrafirm functional integration. Based on efforts to
change attitudes & adversarial relationships
-- Global Supply Chains- advantages that accrue
from sourcing from larger global market e.g., lower
cost & higher quality suppliers. May involve operating
exposure, which is risk found in foreign settings
-- Supply Chain Performance Measurement- Crucial
for firms to know if procedures are working
Future Trends in Supply Chain
Management- Cont.
Increasing Supply Chain Responsiveness
◦ Firms will increasingly need to be more flexible and
responsive to customer needs
◦ Supply chains will need to benchmark industry
performance and meet and improve on a
continuous basis
◦ Responsiveness improvement will come from more
effective and faster product & service delivery
systems
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Future Trends in Supply Chain
Management- Cont.
The Greening of Supply Chains
◦ Supply chains will work harder to
reduce environmental degradation
◦ Large majority (75%) of U.S.
consumers influenced by a firm’s
environmental friendliness
reputation
◦ Recycling and conservation are a
growing alternative in response to
high cost of natural resources
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Future Trends in Supply Chain
Management- Cont.
Reducing Supply Chain Costs
◦ Cost reduction achieved through:
Reduced purchasing costs
Reducing waste
Reducing excess inventory
And reducing non-value added activities
◦ Continuous Improvement through
Benchmarking- improve over competitors’ performance
Trial & error
Increased knowledge of supply chain processes